| Literature DB >> 35741638 |
Patricia Castro1,2,3, Matthew J Bancroft4, Qadeer Arshad5, Diego Kaski1,4.
Abstract
Persistent postural-perceptual dizziness (PPPD) is a common cause of chronic dizziness associated with significant morbidity, and perhaps constitutes the commonest cause of chronic dizziness across outpatient neurology settings. Patients present with altered perception of balance control, resulting in measurable changes in balance function, such as stiffening of postural muscles and increased body sway. Observed risk factors include pre-morbid anxiety and neuroticism and increased visual dependence. Following a balance-perturbing insult (such as vestibular dysfunction), patients with PPPD adopt adaptive strategies that become chronically maladaptive and impair longer-term postural behaviour. In this article, we explore the relationship between behavioural postural changes, perceptual abnormalities, and imaging correlates of such dysfunction. We argue that understanding the pathophysiological mechanisms of PPPD necessitates an integrated methodological approach that is able to concurrently measure behaviour, perception, and cortical and subcortical brain function.Entities:
Keywords: PPPD; behaviour; functional imaging; perception; persistent postural perceptual dizziness; postural control; vestibular net-works
Year: 2022 PMID: 35741638 PMCID: PMC9220882 DOI: 10.3390/brainsci12060753
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Sci ISSN: 2076-3425
Figure 1Pathophysiology of persistent postural-perceptual dizziness and neural networks involved. A triggering event may lead to an acute adaptation phase with transient behavioural and perceptual changes. In the context of predisposing psychological factors, such an adaptation becomes a maladaptive strategy, involving abnormal interactions between primary visual and vestibular cortices, higher executive cortical areas, limbic structures that process mood and emotion, and motor efferent areas. Maladaptation induces heightened introspection and abnormal interpretation of afferent sensory signals (sensory scaling mis-match), which drives typical symptoms of PPPD, including visually induced dizziness, persistent dizziness, gait disorder, and cognitive fatigue.
Figure 2Flowchart depicting the paper selection procedure for the systematic review of neuroimaging data in PPPD patients (based on PRISMA 2009 Flow Diagram guidelines).
Summary of the data extraction from n = 8 articles focusing on pathophysiology of persistent postural-perceptual dizziness (PPPD) using brain imaging methods.
| Author | Year | Country | Sample Size ( | Age (y) | Active Control Group | Non-Imaging Outcome Data | Confounders Considered |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (Mean +/− SD) | |||||||
| Wurthmann et al. [ | 2017 | Germany | 42 PPPD | PPPD—39.28 +/−7.55 | No | DHI | Disease duration |
| Riccelli et al. [ | 2017 | Italy, UK, USA | 15 PPPD | PPPD—33.4 +/− 12.45 Controls—30.13 +/− 5.67 | No | Visual motion stimuli | Personality |
| Passamonti et al. [ | 2018 | UK, Italy, USA | 15 PPPD | PPPD—33.4 +/− 12.45 Controls—30.13 +/− 5.67 | No | Visual motion stimuli | Neuroticism |
| Lee et al. [ | 2018 | Republic of Korea, USA | 38 PPPD | PPPD—48.6 +/− 12 Controls—47.5 +/− 13 | No | DHI | Personality |
| Li et al. [ | 2020 | China | 10 PPPD | PPPD—47.70 +/− 12.37 Control—N/A | No | Disability | Anxiety |
| Na et al. [ | 2019 | China | 25 PPPD | PPPD—61.0 +/− 18.9 Controls—56.0 +/− 14.0 | No | DHI | Duration of disorder |
| Nigro et al. [ | 2019 | Italy, USA, UK | 15 PPPD | PPPD—33.4 +/− 12.4 Controls—30.1 +/− 5.6 | No | DHI | Psychiatric comorbidities |
| Li et al. [ | 2020 | China | 12 PPPD | PPPD—44.25 +/− 10.73 Controls—N/A | No | Disability | Anxiety |